1U 4-5x GPU AMD EPYC System from Tyan at SC17

At SC17 this year AMD had a great presence, as did Tyan. We have reviewed a number of Tyan servers over the past few months as the company is experiencing a resurgence. One of the most popular reviews we published recently on the company was our Tyan Thunder HX GA88-B5631 Server Review 4x GPU in 1U. That particular system sported four GPUs in a dual PCIe root configuration in 1U. It used a single Intel Xeon Scalable CPU which means it is a high-density play with cost savings on the overall system front. At SC17 we saw the AMD variant on display.

Tyan Transport HX GA88-B8021 at SC17

At SC17 we saw the Tyan Transport HX GA88-B8021 at the AMD booth. AMD was showing off a number of partner solutions, but Tyan’s 1U EPYC platform was one of the more unique.

Tyan Transport HX GA88 B8021 At SC17

As a point of perspective, this system was suspended several feet on a booth wall behind a plexiglass shield. We asked Tyan to send us a photo we could use which shows the design without horrible show floor reflections:

Tyan Transport HX GA88 B8021

Key here is that Tyan is able to offer something different. With the AMD EPYC’s massive PCIe expansion capabilities, Tyan can offer a dual PCIe riser for more PCIe slots in the 1U chassis. If you wanted to add high capacity NVMe storage, multiple 100GbE or EDR Infiniband, or even two single-width GPUs the utility of this design is readily apparent. One also gets 16 DDR4 DIMM channels rather than 12 on the comparable Intel platform. That means that one can use lower-cost and lower capacity DIMMs to achieve a memory capacity or hit a higher capacity target (up to 2TB) in this 1U configuration. The benefits of this approach are readily apparent.

We have been told that these are not yet on the market but we can expect them coming. This is certainly an interesting option for GPU compute and potentially even 1U GPU/ NVMe storage configurations.

Patrick has been running STH since 2009 and covers a wide variety of SME, SMB, and SOHO IT topics. Patrick is a consultant in the technology industry and has worked with numerous large hardware and storage vendors in the Silicon Valley. The goal of STH is simply to help users find some information about server, storage and networking, building blocks. If you have any helpful information please feel free to post on the forums.

4 COMMENTS

I´m thinking the same. The only Motherboard i could buy at the moment would be the dual Socket Board from Supermicro which “only” offers 2x PCIe 3.0 x16, 3x PCIe 3.0 x8 and only a single M.2 Slot. Sadly there are much more interesting Boards available for the Intel SP plattform, with also better PCIe expansion options. And this with the less PCIe lanes offering.